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Hypobaric unilateral spinal anesthesia with multimodal analgesia enhances recovery in total knee arthroplasty

BMC Anesthesiol. 2026 Jan 19. doi: 10.1186/s12871-026-03621-5. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is an effective treatment for end-stage knee osteoarthritis, but postoperative pain and delayed recovery remain challenges. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of hypobaric unilateral fine-needle spinal anesthesia combined with multimodal analgesia (MMA) on postoperative recovery in TKA patients.

METHODS: A randomized controlled triple-blind trial enrolled 118 patients scheduled for TKA between January 2022 and June 2023. Patients were divided into three groups: hypobaric fine-needle spinal anesthesia (Group A, n=40), isobaric fine-needle spinal anesthesia (Group B, n=39), and hypobaric spinal-epidural combined anesthesia (Group C, n=39). Outcomes included puncture success rates, puncture time, maximum active knee flexion angle, breakthrough analgesia frequency, statistical test and complications.

RESULTS: No significant differences were observed in puncture success rates. However, Group C had a significantly longer puncture time than Groups A and B. Group B showed a lower maximum active knee flexion angle on postoperative day 1 compared to Groups A and C. Group C had a higher incidence of low back pain and headache within 7 days. Postoperative pain scores (NRS) were significantly lower in Group A at all time points.

CONCLUSIONS: Hypobaric fine-needle spinal anesthesia (Group A) demonstrated superior performance in puncture time, postoperative mobility, and complication rates, making it a preferred anesthetic strategy for TKA.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (ChiCTR2500100428). Registered on 9 April 2025. Retrospectively registered.

PMID:41549267 | DOI:10.1186/s12871-026-03621-5

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